PREDICTIVE POLICING The Optimal Forager and the Missing Dimension ERIC HALFORD MA
PREDICTIVE POLICINGThe Optimal Forager and the Missing Dimension
ERIC HALFORD MA
Origin of ThesisNecessity - CSR and funding formulaEfficiency - Drive Towards Evidence Based Policing- How do you apply science to policing to Enhance Use of ResourcesEffectiveness – How to Continue or Maintain Unprecedented Reductions in CrimeEconomy – Better Value for Money Comprehensive performance management literature review
The Literatureo Criminology, Psychology, Policing
o Problem Orientated Policing – Reduction In NHPTs – All But Ceased
o Hotspot Policing – Effective But Needs To Evolve
o Intelligence Led Policing – Reduction In Intelligence Sees Framework Collapse
o Predictive Policing – Evolution Not Revolution
o Absence of Literature on What is Being Called Predictive Policing
o Empirical Literature Across Policing Academia has Somewhat Stalled
Predictive Policing
No Consensus on Definition but…Increased Efficiency and Value For Money:“With predictive policing, we have the tools to put cops at the right place at the right time or bring other services to impact crime, and we can do so with less” (Gascon, 2009).
Predictive PolicingDisparate Attempts to Introduce Across The UKSome Software Centric Approaches – i.e. PredPolPredominately Adopted in The Form of Optimal Forager/Near Repeat Victimisation 9 Potential Case Studies Identified
Predictive PolicingHow The Research Was Done:
3 Wholesale Case Studies20 + Interviews of Practitioners And AnalystsAnalysis of Crime RecordsQuestionnairesHundreds of Pages of Quantitative Analytical Reports
*Caveat - Access Denied To Study Pilots Using Software Approaches I.E. PredPol Which May Impact on Conclusions
The Optimal Forager• Pretext Is Simple – Criminals Behave As
Foraging Animals• Foraging Animals Target Areas Low in Risk,
High in Reward – Food is Their Target• Criminals Act in The Same Manner –
Realisable Property is Their Target
Op Forager is Fundamentally Flawed
Research Shows That All UK Implementations of Op Forager Assumes a Two Tier InteractionThe Criminal is The PredatorThe Victim is The Prey
Op Forager is Fundamentally Flawed
Ecology Literature However Identifies it as a Three Tier Interaction (Hugie, 1994 And Sih, 1998)Predator (Police – Capable Guardian) – Prey (Criminal – Motivated Offender) – Resource (Victim) Why is This Important?
What Ecology SaysThe Impact of Increased Predation Risk is Consistently Overlooked (Lima, 2005)Increased Predation on Foraging Animals Shows That it Does Not Reduce or Stop The Animals Foraging (Verdolin, 2005)It Forces the Forager to Alter Their Behaviour in a Number of Ways (Lima, 2002)
Changes in Behaviour1. The Forager Will Alter Their Selected Resource 2. They Will Reduce The Handling Time3. They Will Increase Their Vigilance In Response To Increased Predation,
Particularly On The Periphery Of Previously Foraged Areas (Kelley Et Al, 2001)
4. Higher ‘Giving Up’ Rate by the Forager Before Ultimately Seeking a New Foraging Patch (Kelly Et Al, 2001).
5. Forager May Also Choose to Begin Searching in Groups Which Provides Additional Security And Early Detection Of Predators (Berkley, 2000)
6. They Will Switch The Foraging Patch (Engelhart And Muller-schwarze 1995; Epple Et Al. 1993; Pfister Et Al. 1990; Sullivan And Crump 1984)
Identified Criminal Behavioural Manifestations1. The Criminal Changed the Type of Target i.e. From Dwellings to
Business2. Items That They Sought Changed to Ones That Had a Lower
Handling Time 3. The Criminal Became More Aware of Increased Police Presence.
As Such the ‘Giving Up’ May Increased 4. Particularly Prevalent at the Edge of Patches or in This Context,
the Predicted 400m Prediction Zones5. They Recruited Assistance – Social Contagion? Boost Impact6. Most Significantly, the Criminal Simply Changed the Patch and
Switched Their Activity From One Area to Another
The ResultMinimal, If Any, ‘Overall’ Crime Reduction Or PreventionIf Crime Reduction or Prevention Did Occur it Was Only Small, Short Term And Geo-SpecificSignificant Levels of Crime Displacement OccurredCan in Fact Increase Overall Crime if Implemented Ineffectively
On the Plus Side Crime Diffusion Was Present
How to Combat Behavioural Change?
It is Not a One Way InteractionThere Are Behavioural Changes That The Predator Can Make
When a Predator Can Move Between the Area of the Preys Resource and Natural Habitat, it Directly Impacts On The Prey’s Mortality and Negates any Antipredator Benefits of Moving Beyond Their Habitat
(Werner and Gilliam, 1984 and Bouskilla, 1998)
What Does That Mean?
If the Police Can Operate in Both the Area of the Criminal’s Home or Base and the Area the Criminal Commits Crime and Seeks Their Victims (Resource)……..……They Stand a Significantly Greater Chance of Apprehending or Deterring Them Completely
How Can We Do That?• Traditional Hotspot Policing AKA – Crime
Spikes• The Standalone Optimal Forager Predictive
Approach• The Wider Hotspot ‘PredPol’ Approach• Or, Something Entirely New?• A Combined Predictive Model
TRADITIONAL OR PREDICTED HOTSPOT APPROACH
Traditional Hot-spot or Predicted Forager Locality
Traditional or Predicted Hotspot Approach
Both Cause Crime DisplacementBoth Rely on Intelligence to Operate within the ‘Natural Habitat’However, some UK forces have experienced up to a 75% reduction in intel 2005-2015
Both End Up ‘Rounding Up the Usual Suspects’Is the Current NIM Framework Even Effective Anymore?
THE WIDER ‘PREDPOL’ HOTSPOT
……”You can’t just go and suppress all those small spikes in crime; you’re going to suppress the big hot spot……the small spikes in crime
that are out there in the environment are ready to nucleate into a new one.. However, the larger,
subcritical hot spots do not re-emerge after increased policing”
(Brantingham, 2006)
Translated = Unpalatable. You Probably Need a Big Budget And Lots of Resources Dedicated to Patrol Saturation
A Combined Predictive Model
EVOLUTION NOT REVOLUTION
Predicts Locality of Both Crime and OffenderOptimal Forager Crime Location Predictions Geographical Profiling to Predict the Serial Offenders Likely Home or Base
Purely Evidence Based and Scientific
GEOGRAPHICAL PROFILING DEFINITION
“An investigative technique used to
determine the most likely location of a
criminal’s residence based upon the
geographic location of crime sites”
(Prof. David L. Wiesenthal, 2012)
THE COMBINED PREDICTIVE MODEL
The StepsOffences Committed
Crime Linkage Analysis Identifies Serial Offending and Linked Crimes
Geographically Profile Linked Offences – Predict Offenders Natural Habitat
Optimal Forager Analysis – Predict Future Crime Area
Traditional Policing Techniques – Subsequent Use of Resources to Target the Profiled Areas and Suspects
The Predicted ResultEnhanced Focus on T&C of Finite ResourcesEvidence Basis for Target SelectionEvidence Basis for Priority Offender ManagementGreater ‘Overall’ Crime Reduction and Prevention PotentialReduced Crime DisplacementMagnified Crime Diffusion
The Potential BlockersCops are Rubbish at Crime Linkage
The Human Factor – Staff Must ‘Buy In’ for SuccessTraining is Key – Staff Must Understand the Theory to Buy InSenior Managers – Attitude and Support Will Make it Stand or Fall
The FutureMore Effective Ways to Link Crimes
Better Use of Big Data and Predictive Analytics
Predict Offenders Before They Offend
Intervention Pathways
SIMPLE'S!ANY QUESTIONS?